Reasonable Compromise
Reasonable
Compromise
OK, So Gun Control is Silly and Ineffective - but Why
the 'Extreme' Rhetoric...?
by Andrew Johnstone, RPh, M.D.
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About This in a Forum
Society rightly expects hunters and target shooters (most NRA members), to
politely endure minor inconveniences from gun control laws if it serves to make
our society safer, but it is becoming obvious that even "sensible" gun
laws do not make us safer.
The Spring 1995 (vol. 63:2) issue of Tennessee Law Review is available for
$13 from the Law Library at 615-974-4464, and contains 375 pages of thoroughly
referenced studies on the impact of guns and gun laws on society. In that issue,
an article titled "Guns and Public Health: Epidemic of Violence, or
Pandemic of Propaganda" makes it clear that advocates of increased gun
regulation have resorted to distortion of data, and in some cases, pure
fabrication of "facts" in order to deceive voters into supporting gun
control. They do this despite clear evidence that even "reasonable"
gun laws typically backfire, and have cost thousands of lives yearly in this
country.
R.J. Rummel, in "Death by Government" (ISBN 1-56000-145-3) notes
than on an international level, military and police have murdered an average of
over 4,000 people per day for the past 100 years, a number many times greater
than the number of lives lost by violent crime, suicide, and gun accidents
combined.
J Simkin, in "Lethal Laws - Gun Control is the Key to Genocide"
(ISBN 0-9642304-0-2) points out that in EVERY case of such genocide, the cascade
began with registration of firearms "to reduce crime." Many of the
current gun law proposals seem merely to be excuses for creating a potentially
dangerous government database of gun owners, in clear violation of U.S. law.
With even politically liberal sociologists and criminologists like Gary Kleck
pointing out that gun control laws are much more dangerous to a society, and to
individual citizens, than guns themselves, a new breed of gun control opponents
has appeared--people who don't necessarily even own or like firearms, and don't
bow their heads in shame whenever the president tries to blame a gun tragedy on
the "gun lobby."
As a physician who feels a duty to protect the Public Health from legislative
quackery, I no longer view gun laws as just silly, ineffective ways for spoiled
soccer moms to get warm fuzzies. Even allegedly "reasonable" gun
control laws pose an insidious and dangerous threat to our safety, including
that of our children.
It's about time folks like Wayne LaPierre started using strong language --you
don't compromise when lives are at stake.
Permission given to print the above letter, signed
Andrew Johnstone, RPh/MD
Indianapolis, IN 46227